Answer:
There is 13.48 grams of P2O5 formed
Step-by-step explanation:
Step 1: Data given
A decomposition of a sample of diphosphorus trioxide forms 1.29 g phosphorus to every 1.00 g oxygen.
Mass of P = 5.89 grams
Molar mass of O2 = 32.0 g/mol
atomic mass of P = 30.97 g/mol
molar mass of P2O5 = 141.94 g/mol
Step 2: The balanced equation
4P(s)+5O2(g)⇔ 2P2O5(s)
Step 3: Calculate moles of P
Moles P = Mass P / atomic mass P
Moles P = 5.89 grams / 30.97 g/mol
Moles P = 0.190 moles
Step 4: Calculate moles of P2O5
For 4 moles P we need 5 moles O2 to produce 2 moles P2O5
For 0.190 moles of P we'll have 0.190/2 = 0.095 moles P2O5
Step 5: Calculate mass of P2O5
Mass P2O5 = moles P2O5 * molar mass P2O5
Mass P2O5 = 0.095 moles * 141.94 g/mol
Mass P2O5 = 13.48 grams
There is 13.48 grams of P2O5 formed